Los Angeles Times

Is it global warming or old patterns? Experts say both

- By Bettina Boxall

suffered through its hottest July on record, while August has pushed sea surface temperatur­es off the San Diego coast to all-time highs.

Are these punishing summer heat waves the consequenc­es of global warming or the result of familiar weather patterns?

The answer, scientists say, is both.

Climate change is amplifying natural variations in the weather. So when California roasts under a stubborn high-pressure system, the thermomete­r climbs higher than it would have in the past.

“What we’re seeing now is the atmosphere doing what it has always done. But it’s doing it in a warmer world, so the heat waves occurring today are hotter,” said Park Williams, an associate research professor at Colum-California bia University’s Lamont-Doherty Earth Observator­y. “We can expect that to continue.”

Though a weak-to-moderate El Niño, marked by warming ocean temperatur­es, may develop this fall and winter, scientists say it’s not at play now.

Art Miller, a research oceanograp­her at Scripps Institutio­n of Oceanograp­hy, pointed to the highpressu­re system as the im--

mediate cause of the recordshat­tering sea surface temperatur­es recorded this month off Scripps Pier, where researcher­s have been taking daily temperatur­e measuremen­ts since 1916.

On Aug. 1, a thermomete­r plunged into a bucket of seawater hit 78.6 degrees, breaking a 1931 record. On Aug. 9, the water temperatur­e was 79.5 degrees.

The massive high-pressure dome hanging around the West shut down the northerly winds that typically cause an upwelling of colder, deeper water off the Southern California coast, Miller said.

The layer of warm water is relatively thin, 30 to 60 feet deep, and peters out along the Central Coast. North of Santa Barbara, surface waters are actually cooler than normal.

Underlying the regional conditions is the past century’s roughly 1.8-degree increase in global ocean temperatur­es.

“This is the type of activity we expect to occur when you run together natural variations in the system with a long-term trend” of warming, Miller said, referring to the record-busting at Scripps Pier. “I’m not surprised.”

Global warming is expressed “in fits and spurts,” Williams said. From 1999 to 2014, the planet’s oceans stored much of the extra warmth generated by heattrappi­ng greenhouse gases. Global air temperatur­es were relatively stable. Then in 2015-16, strong El Niño conditions unleashed that extra heat.

The planet is feeling the effects.

“We’re in one of those hot clusters of years,” Williams said.

It could be followed by a period of stable temperatur­es that in turn is trailed by another period of rapid warming.

“In a few years we’ll be used to the type of heat waves we’re seeing this year” only to be shocked when continued climate change makes them even hotter, Williams predicted.

On July 6, all-time temperatur­e records were set at UCLA (111), Burbank and Santa Ana (114), and Van Nuys (117). Chino hit 120 degrees. Scorching temperatur­es in Northern California helped fuel raging wildfires, including the Mendocino Complex, which has seared its way into the record books as the largest wildfire in the state’s modern history.

“This is not all about climate change. But climate change is having an influence and exacerbati­ng the conditions,” said Kevin Trenberth, a senior scientist at the National Center for Atmospheri­c Research.

Some climate scientists have suggested that global warming is promoting atmospheri­c changes that favor the formation of the kind of persistent high-pressure system that has driven up temperatur­es this summer.

But Williams said climate change models have yet to confirm that. Researcher­s have also failed to detect a global trend of more prolonged ridging patterns, he added.

“I personally don’t think the current ridge is a function of climate change,” Williams said. “The atmosphere has a mind of its own.”

The federal Climate Prediction Center last week forecast a 60% chance of El Niño developing this fall and a 70% chance by winter.

El Niño is characteri­zed by warming surface waters in the east-central tropical Pacific and often warmerthan-average air temperatur­es in the West. But across most of the Pacific, the temperatur­e of equatorial surface waters is near average, according to the climate center’s Aug. 13 report.

“There is little indication El Niño will be more than weak or modest,” said Nick Bond, a research scientist with the National Oceanic and Atmospheri­c Administra­tion and the University of Washington.

El Niño can deliver a wet winter to Southern California, but Bond said this year’s would probably be too meek to do that.

The climate center’s three-month forecast predicts above-average temperatur­es for most of the country, including California. The Southland has gotten a break from blistering temperatur­es this week, but a high-pressure ridge is expected to return.

“It looks like August is going to be a hot month,” Bond said.

 ?? Mario Tama Getty Images ?? SEA SURFACE temperatur­es set records this month at San Diego’s Scripps Pier.
Mario Tama Getty Images SEA SURFACE temperatur­es set records this month at San Diego’s Scripps Pier.
 ?? Mario Tama Getty Images ?? AQUARIST Mike Rinaudo takes a water sample at Scripps Pier in San Diego. On Aug. 1, the water hit 78.1 degrees, breaking a 1931 record. Last week it registered 79.5.
Mario Tama Getty Images AQUARIST Mike Rinaudo takes a water sample at Scripps Pier in San Diego. On Aug. 1, the water hit 78.1 degrees, breaking a 1931 record. Last week it registered 79.5.
 ?? Allen J. Schaben Los Angeles Times ?? A MAN SURFS in Newport Beach. Globally, ocean temperatur­es have risen 1.8 degrees over the past century.
Allen J. Schaben Los Angeles Times A MAN SURFS in Newport Beach. Globally, ocean temperatur­es have risen 1.8 degrees over the past century.

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